similar to: ext3 / ext4 on USB flash drive?

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 11000 matches similar to: "ext3 / ext4 on USB flash drive?"

2013 Aug 29
0
Re: ext3 / ext4 on USB flash drive?
On Thu, Aug 29, 2013 at 12:56:35PM +0100, Mark Ballard wrote: > I think this is really an attempt at user feedback, rather than user > discussion. But there's no such thing as a user-feedback mail list. > > Nevertheless, others may find this pertinent: why doesn't mke2fs > handle USB's competently? And if it does, why doesn't it reassure me > so? And how can I
2013 Aug 30
1
Re: ext3 / ext4 on USB flash drive?
Agh. This is great to have some of this clarified, Ted. It does unfortunately reinorce my cynicism. But it also fills my heart. That is, though it might be bad news to hear that I have most likely bought a piece of crap, and that there's no way I can really tell what's inside the cover unless either I do some kind of low-level alchemy of a kind that mere users would normally be well
2013 Aug 29
2
Re: ext3 / ext4 on USB flash drive?
On 8/29/13 10:46 AM, Theodore Ts'o wrote: > So this is fundamentally a problem with the quality of the hardware, > and that's not something the file system can really compensate for. > And there's no way to tell whether a particular USB device has has a > high quality flash device, or is a craptastic flash device. It's not > like we can query the device for "I
2013 Aug 30
0
Re: ext3 / ext4 on USB flash drive?
> We'd like to help in software, but we can't; we have no reliable way > of knowing most of the necessary details of this class of hardware. > It's not exported in any way. > > So unfortunately we are as in the dark as you are in this case. This is incredible, Mr Sandeen. You mean USB flash manufacturers (what's their body - the USB Implementer's Forum?) have
2014 Oct 10
0
Re: CF Card wear optimalisation for ext4
On Oct 8, 2014, at 10:28 AM, Jelle de Jong <jelledejong at powercraft.nl> wrote: > Hello everyone, > > I been using CF cards for almost more then 7 years now with ext > file-system without any major problems on ALIX boards. > > Last year I took 30 other systems in production with ext4 and the CF > cards been dropping out pretty fast, it may have been a bad batch but
2014 Oct 08
3
CF Card wear optimalisation for ext4
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hello everyone, I been using CF cards for almost more then 7 years now with ext file-system without any major problems on ALIX boards. Last year I took 30 other systems in production with ext4 and the CF cards been dropping out pretty fast, it may have been a bad batch but I do want to look at it. I don't think the devices writes a lot of IO (is
2005 May 07
6
New to CentOS, is this a safe bet?
I know this may be a stupid place to ask, but I have to ask. I'm looking for a new Linux distro to use and support. I've been a loyal purchaser of SuSE Linux Pro for the last 3 years. I've paid my $90 loyally, in part because I wanted money to actually go to someone working on OSS, but also because I thought it was a good bargain, to get a quality, tested distro for that cost. The
2013 Aug 30
2
Re: ext3 / ext4 on USB flash drive?
On Fri, Aug 30, 2013 at 10:56:17AM +0100, Mark Ballard wrote: > > This is incredible, Mr Sandeen. You mean USB flash manufacturers > (what's their body - the USB Implementer's Forum?) have simply not > provided a means for software to query the underlying hardware in a > USB flash? Have software producers asked them for this? No, they haven't. And yes we have, since
2011 Jan 02
7
Rails, .swf, .flv
I have the following HAML code ul{ ''id'' => tutorials_ul } %li %a{''href'' => ''/videos/create-command-001.swf''} ''Edition swf'' %li %a{''href'' => ''/videos/create-command-001.flv''} ''Edition flv'' When the user clicks on
2014 Oct 11
2
Re: CF Card wear optimalisation for ext4
Something else that you might want to do is count the number of journal commits that are taking place, via a command like this: perf stat -e jbd2:jbd2_start_commit -a sleep 3600 This will count the number of jbd2 commits are executed in 3600 seconds --- i.e., an hour. If you are running some workload which is constantly calling fsync(2), that will be forcing journal commits, and those turn into
2010 Mar 10
39
SSD Optimizations
I''m looking to try BTRFS on a SSD, and I would like to know what SSD optimizations it applies. Is there a comprehensive list of what ssd mount option does? How are the blocks and metadata arranged? Are there options available comparable to ext2/ext3 to help reduce wear and improve performance? Specifically, on ext2 (journal means more writes, so I don''t use ext3 on SSDs,
2012 May 22
3
SSD erase state and reducing SSD wear
I''ve got two recent examples of SSDs. Their pristine state from the manufacturer shows: Device Model: OCZ-VERTEX3 # hexdump -C /dev/sdd 00000000 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |................| * 1bf2976000 Device Model: OCZ VERTEX PLUS (OCZ VERTEX 2E) # hexdump -C /dev/sdd 00000000 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff |................| *
2007 Sep 11
5
Flash IDE
Hi We have a number offices accommodating 4-6 people each hence it is very important for PBX to be fanless and silent. We have been looking at using IDE flash disks also called DOM. The performance tests we have done so far satisfy our requirements, however we are concerned with DOM durability. We have installed debian and vanilla asterisk on 1GB DOM. All seems to work fine at the moment however
2017 Oct 02
3
XP auto enrollment error; TEMP profile
On 10/02/2017 12:32 AM, Reindl Harald via samba wrote: > > > Am 02.10.2017 um 07:25 schrieb ToddAndMargo via samba: >> On 10/01/2017 10:03 PM, Reindl Harald (mobile) via samba wrote: >>> sorry but to say it clear: to think a anti-virus can replace a solid >>> operating system is a naive and dangerous attitude >>> >> >> Uhhh,   Why do you not
2004 Feb 11
4
ext3 Overhead
Hello! I'm using a CompactFlash as storage device. Since those CF cards only have limited write cycles (CF does wear-levelling by itself, but you don't want to write too many timet so the card) i was wondering by what a factor the journaling of ext3 increases the write accesses to the CompactFlash compared to ext2. Thanks a lot already for your help! Sincerely Chris Braun
2007 Apr 02
2
Re: On Topic: Cheapest Asterisk USB Key?
On Mon, 2007-04-02 at 16:30 -0700, asterisk-users-request@lists.digium.com wrote: > Date: Mon, 02 Apr 2007 20:26:09 +0100 > From: Thomas Kenyon <digium@sanguinarius.co.uk> > Subject: [asterisk-users] Re: On Topic: Cheapest Asterisk USB Key? > To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion > <asterisk-users@lists.digium.com> > Message-ID:
2007 Feb 28
1
relay-ctrl works
In case anyone still cares, relay-ctrl works with Dovecot. Dovecot's end of the bargain requires a dirty little script to set TCPREMOTEIP based on the arguments passed from imap-login: #!/bin/sh TCPREMOTEIP=`echo "$@" | sed -e 's|.* ||' -e 's|]$||'` export TCPREMOTEIP exec "$@" And this (long) line in dovecot.conf: mail_executable: envdir
2013 Sep 03
0
Re: ext3 / ext4 on USB flash drive?
>From the little I have heard about control systems for cars, which was some years ago, they were blockhead proprietary. The analogy would only work if computing was customarily blackbox technology, which it isn't. I'd be surprised if there were any branded flash drives that contained less than their advertised amount of storage. That leaves the question of what is going on under the
2016 Feb 13
2
Code in headers
> On Feb 11, 2016, at 12:43 AM, via llvm-dev <Alexander G. Riccio> wrote: > > I don’t think that we can agree to abstract code guidelines without knowing what it means in practice for the codebase. If you’re interested in this, please include a diff that shows the impact to the headers, and we should also measure what happens to the performance of the generated compiler. > >
2014 Oct 16
0
Re: CF Card wear optimalisation for ext4
On Oct 16, 2014, at 10:25 AM, Bodo Thiesen <bothie@gmx.de> wrote: > * Andreas Dilger <adilger@dilger.ca> hat geschrieben: > >> You can see in the ext4 superblock the amount of data that has been >> written to a filesystem over its lifetime: >> >> Note that this number isn't wholly accurate, but rather a guideline. > > Is is more like a